PORTLAND, OREGON: THEN AND NOW

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • PATREON: / exploreoregon
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    INSTAGRAM: / pdxfilmexplorer
    I am back with a fresh installment of Portland: Then and Now... as promised. This particular edition takes places over two days (and thus is in two different parts of town). The first part takes place mostly in the Kerns neighborhood before ending in the Hollywood District. In the second portion I begin on the northern end of Sellwood and travel through the Brooklyn neighborhood and end on the edge of the Hosford-Abernathy neighborhood. One part northeast Portland and one part southeast Portland.
    I visit a lot of spots, do a bundle of comparisons and, of course, interject my own thoughts and historical tidbits in between. Hope you all are continuing to enjoy these as they are a nice counterbalance to my documentary films.
    NOTE: Due to two of my clips having issues the video is a little glitchy between 49:38 and 52:26 but I kept them in anyway as it's more me telling a story rather than showing things of significance.

Комментарии • 143

  • @lisaknieriem5852
    @lisaknieriem5852 Месяц назад +10

    Native Portlander here. Really good video. I really love the history and old photos. I miss old Portland immensely!!! 👋😎💚

  • @larryjex6485
    @larryjex6485 Месяц назад +15

    40 years ago, I used to walk that very route up Sandy Blvd to my job in the Hollywood District. This brings back a lot of memories.

  • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
    @SisterSherryDoingStuff Месяц назад +16

    18:21 I remember the 7-UP sign.

    • @gregoryhagen8801
      @gregoryhagen8801 20 дней назад +2

      I can't believe they tore it down. It was unique to Portland as the "Capital records" building is to L.A.

    • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
      @SisterSherryDoingStuff 20 дней назад

      @@gregoryhagen8801 Agreed!!!

    • @jsteezy80
      @jsteezy80 12 дней назад +1

      Same. I remember seeing it growing up from the freeway. Also when I went to high school near by at Benson

  • @more_on_nick
    @more_on_nick Месяц назад +11

    @3:55 skateboarders likely poured that concrete so the wall could be turned into a skatespot. Anyone ever been down to Burnside skatepark under the bridge at SE 2nd?

    • @xGthomasGx
      @xGthomasGx Месяц назад +1

      My thought exactly. Thats exactly how Burnside was created. A few skaters and a few bags of concrete.

    • @rljpdx
      @rljpdx Месяц назад +1

      yeah its an industrial area now and the skatepark is just a dilapidated cleared out area. It used to be completely fenced around but it's been years since I've been on that side of town. I currently live in Portland, Oregon and these are great remembrances. Not being a Portland native, but having lived here the last 20 years I appreciate this video and all the great stuff it portrays. Portland has gone downhill since the turn of the millennium and it's no longer the weird fun city it used to be. Now it's just people struggling for something to do. Sad really.

    • @roblinnell8880
      @roblinnell8880 Месяц назад

      used to skate there a lot. I believe a guy named Sage started it.

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, I used to walk down there with my kids so they could skate. We were the first ones there once, and my youngest (5 or 6) went over to that one steep bowl, looked in and said calmly, "Hey, there's dead guy in the bowl." Turned out he was just passed out, but it I still marvel at how my first grader was so collected seeing his first "corpse", lol. We lived just off Hawthorne and went to the Bagdad and Cinemagic. Great place to raise kids imo.

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад

      @@rljpdx I mean, that's what they say, but it's not my experience.

  • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
    @SisterSherryDoingStuff Месяц назад +7

    23:08 I'm so glad they preserved the old Hollywood theater. I've been one time - and I can't remember what I saw. It's just a really cool icon.

  • @Latushka
    @Latushka Месяц назад +7

    Ive been a delivery driver in Portland for 10 years and have lived here for 30 years. Its cool to learn about all the history around here. Keep it up.

  • @secard4202
    @secard4202 Месяц назад +4

    The "land was poking out like that" for skateboarding.

    • @gthisiseasy
      @gthisiseasy Месяц назад

      Nah BMX

    • @StevetheAmateurHistorian
      @StevetheAmateurHistorian  Месяц назад

      Makes a lot of sense. Even with that blind corner just down the street I get the feeling not a lot of cars go through there.

  • @WestCoastBuilder
    @WestCoastBuilder Месяц назад +6

    Definitely appreciate these videos so I can find cool history when creating my recreations of Portland series. Keep them coming Steve, love the work you do to keep Portland history alive!

  • @deanrivera8016
    @deanrivera8016 Месяц назад +4

    Man all that brings back so many memories of my time that I lived in Portland for 33 years
    Great video Steve !!!

  • @LesStephens-xe6qp
    @LesStephens-xe6qp Месяц назад +3

    Once again a great show. I get stressed when you say pictures from the 50's and 60's are old but you are right. I didn't think it was old when I was growing up.

    • @StevetheAmateurHistorian
      @StevetheAmateurHistorian  Месяц назад +2

      In all fairness my dad was born in the 50s and my mom in the 60s so I think I just have a predisposition to thinking the 50s and 60s are “old”.

  • @ernestlee2796
    @ernestlee2796 Месяц назад +4

    I grew up on 32nd and Hawthorne. I went to sunnyside elementary in 84

  • @user-xc5qo6yo6w
    @user-xc5qo6yo6w Месяц назад +4

    The building at 24 and sandy was replaced in the 60 with timberline dodge and when the dodge dealership closed that building was converted to what you see now

  • @eblackadder3
    @eblackadder3 Месяц назад +4

    Then and Now segments are definitely my favorite. I'd love to see one on Northwest 23rd Avenue and the site of the 1905 Lewis & Clark exposition. 40 years ago, I lived on Northwest 22 and Wilson in a Victorian style house built around 1900. The house is still there, one of the few remaining, most of that neighborhood was demolished when US 30 was extended off the Fremont Bridge in the late 1980s. I'd love to find an old picture of the house.
    Thanks for all your research and work!

  • @Randicles
    @Randicles Месяц назад +2

    Just wanted to say that I love your videos ! With me being a local now for the last 10 years , the videos really help to give me a glimpse into the past . I'm a big history guy so these videos really help to see what used to go where , I'm always curious about stuff

  • @ericnelson3820
    @ericnelson3820 Месяц назад +2

    This area was my 90's stomping ground. Pounded many a beer at the Yukon and loved La Carretta. Great memories and fantastic video.

  • @carrieharris9479
    @carrieharris9479 Месяц назад +2

    Hi Steve - I appreciate all your hardwork and research of Portland "Then and Now". I grew up here and I remember alot of the changes that took place. Keep up the good work. Thanks - CH

  • @flemishbun
    @flemishbun Месяц назад +2

    thanks for lining up the images i love looking at how areas developed

  • @secard4202
    @secard4202 Месяц назад +1

    My tavorite part is when you got the wrong spot, but then went through the process of figuring out where it actually was and showed us. Just like I do when hunting on google earth for old photo modern locations. Really neat to see.

  • @kitschmygrits4836
    @kitschmygrits4836 Месяц назад +1

    Steve I am so glad to see how much your channel has grown but I am not surprised. You sure have been consistent and I'm glad your hard work is paying off. Your content is really great.

  • @n.ciebevilaqua3603
    @n.ciebevilaqua3603 Месяц назад +4

    I just found a couple of your videos in the last few days. I was at Reed from 1979-1985 (I took a year or two off :) ), and I haven't been back to Portland since, even though I LOVED it and still miss it. One day I'll get back there. But anyway, so far I haven't recognized most of the places you've featured--it's been a LONG time (I've been trying to remember stuff like which bridge we used to take downtown, and the name of the big street that led to it--there was a great deli there) and I think you've been doing neighborhoods where I didn't spend time back then. Of course, I recognize the mountain in the background in many of your images!
    But thanks for bringing back my memories of Portland, and I'm looking forward to seeing more.

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад +1

      I always get lost in that area around Reed. I used to feel like I'd never find my way out, lol. Like IKEA.

    • @n.ciebevilaqua3603
      @n.ciebevilaqua3603 Месяц назад +1

      @@raincadeifyThat was probably the area where I was LEAST likely to get lost! I knew where the Safeway and the bar we all used to go to were, so I was good. 😎

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад +1

      @@n.ciebevilaqua3603 There's a bar over there, lol?

    • @n.ciebevilaqua3603
      @n.ciebevilaqua3603 29 дней назад

      @@raincadeify Nah--college students don't go to bars. :) It was a great little place--Lutz Tavern. I'd love to think it's still there!

    • @poofygoof
      @poofygoof 12 дней назад +1

      @@n.ciebevilaqua3603 the safeway is now a bi mart, and the IGA is a safeway. Woodstock is pretty hoppin' these days. (yes, the lutz is still there... I haven't been in a while but I bet they still have PBR.)

  • @hunglo666
    @hunglo666 Месяц назад +1

    how awesome was that , i used to live off Knight st..thanks for opening my eyes to the local history in my neighborhood

  • @michellelangdon5134
    @michellelangdon5134 Месяц назад +4

    I'm so glad they only altered the milk building instead of completely demolishing it. I bet people drive by there all the time and wonder why it's shaped the way it is. It's a shame modern architecture is so non-descript now. Great video Steve!

  • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
    @SisterSherryDoingStuff Месяц назад +3

    8:46 I've always loved that building across the street. For as long as I can remember - that lower corner spot was a vintage/second hand furniture store. It's been years since it's been occupied. Not sure if the apartments above are still in use. I always was curious about them.

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад +1

      I think that's the place that had vintage lamps, right?

    • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
      @SisterSherryDoingStuff Месяц назад

      @@raincadeify ... I can't remember.

  • @carlbeamon1343
    @carlbeamon1343 Месяц назад +2

    Awesome video of PDX, I use to live in Portland from ‘96-2007 and it was great looking at the SE area of the city. Along 58:28 with Powell, Sandy and you having the old photos to compare was great. You were close to an old friends home around 33 SE. Thanks so much! 💙👏🏾

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад

      The Eastside IS Portland as far as I'm concerned, lol.

  • @franklynrizzo8328
    @franklynrizzo8328 16 дней назад

    Steve, three years ago, I said you should be doing this for a living! I’m glad to see you’re still at it. Godspeed!

  • @frederickbooth7970
    @frederickbooth7970 Месяц назад +2

    Really enjoy your before & after pictures. You clearly try hard to line up the views well. As born & raised in Portland 68 year old man, in my younger days my family spent a lot of time going to specialty stores located in the Hollywood district looking for shoes that would fit my extra wide but small feet. We went to the Alex Volchuck`s boot & shoe shop on Sandy located on the south side of the street. Also there used to be a 7- UP bottling plant on the north side of Sandy around the mid-30s streets. My elementary school had a field trip there where we saw the glass bottles washed & refilled after being checked for defects.

  • @casketeir
    @casketeir Месяц назад +1

    3:33 Once Apon A Time - Portland had a casket culture back in the day. They ended around the 2000's, the Mom & Pop shops in Portland and local areas used to number 6 or 7 throughout the 20th century.

  • @rudecrudefood7244
    @rudecrudefood7244 Месяц назад +1

    Great video. Grew up all over this part of town. Yukon shuffleboard in the 70’s. Outstanding

  • @heatherabusneineh6281
    @heatherabusneineh6281 Месяц назад +1

    Love this! I grew up near 18th and Fremont in the 70s-80s, but I spent most of my free time in Hollywood district.
    My husband and I met at the YMCA on 39th.

  • @RosannJasso-ku1vx
    @RosannJasso-ku1vx Месяц назад +1

    Steve, as a new Oregonian and lover of history you are giving me great story’s! I’ve been visiting many towns new to me, plus Portland and thanks for showing me parts I probably would never see. From CG Oregon.

  • @ams8376
    @ams8376 Месяц назад +2

    I pray portland gets back to the way it was my family and I visited twice every summer and we miss it terribly. It just got to unsafe and trashed .praying it cleans up ❤🙏🏻absolutely love portland !

    • @ams8376
      @ams8376 Месяц назад

      Love your video !❤

  • @zooropa84
    @zooropa84 Месяц назад +1

    It's fascinating how in most before and after pictures, there seems to be more trees and plants. Seems to me Portland has become greener over the years.

  • @d.bcooper7819
    @d.bcooper7819 Месяц назад +2

    24th and Sandy was leveled at least 20years ago.

    • @brantardrey7360
      @brantardrey7360 9 дней назад

      24th and Sandy I used to go to Benson in 70 and I'd walk over to the Dodge dealer and look at all the brand new cooters Challengers dusters roadrunners all that stuff

  • @rickdetroye7918
    @rickdetroye7918 Месяц назад +3

    Sandy Blvd was Oregon Hwy 30. Steigerwald is pronounced, st-eye-grr-waald. Steigerwald National Wildlife Refuge, located just east of Washougal, WA on Hwy 14, is named after the dairy farm which was once located there.

  • @Lee_Now1890
    @Lee_Now1890 Месяц назад

    thank you. I grew up in Portland in the 60's, this was fantastic!. Learned a lot and enjoyed going down memory lane.

  • @BridgesOnBikes
    @BridgesOnBikes 25 дней назад

    I can confirm that the first tree is a silver maple and I would definitely agree it is the same tree in the picture. The second one is a horse chestnut and it looks to be the same in both pictures. Excellent work!

  • @cmcbarnett
    @cmcbarnett Месяц назад +1

    Jump back to time…
    Thank you so much for this video.
    I love all the work that you put into it.
    My old stomping grounds and can familiarize allot of it.
    Thank you.

  • @calamityjade3075
    @calamityjade3075 Месяц назад +3

    Foster Rd similar to Sandy tho much smaller scale. Runs diagonally. Is Foster an old trail as well?

    • @StevetheAmateurHistorian
      @StevetheAmateurHistorian  Месяц назад +3

      I’m actually not sure. I want to say Foster Road was more deliberate but I actually should look into that some more. I’ve wanted to do a video about Sandy Blvd History and Foster Road could be a side project to that.

    • @calamityjade3075
      @calamityjade3075 Месяц назад +3

      @@StevetheAmateurHistorian Foster heading East goes right into what used to be Lent's Junction- a little train stop and I think a post office. It was considered it's own little town at one time.

  • @mendicantvagabond
    @mendicantvagabond Месяц назад +2

    Hello been watching you for a long time now my wife Hillary and I have enjoyed many of your videos. Ahh Sellwood takes us back. You should do a video on my secret hood aka Montivilla 😮

  • @crazygranny2609
    @crazygranny2609 19 дней назад

    Thank you. I really enjoyed this. Born and raised in this great city, and now thru you, i cam enjoy it even more.

  • @candymcmurdo01
    @candymcmurdo01 26 дней назад

    Thank you, I'm from Portland and I always enjoy history from my hometown.💙

  • @amyluxner2347
    @amyluxner2347 Месяц назад

    This is great ! Alot of time ,effort, smarts...you've put in ! Great job ..keep it up 😊 thks again

  • @natashamurphy9736
    @natashamurphy9736 26 дней назад

    Thanks Im a Oregonian born in mis 70s in Grants pass but some of my jobs had me in Portland driving around so and I always loved history and the different snap shots in time.

  • @hraven7799
    @hraven7799 Месяц назад

    Wonderful video, Steve! Thank you for caring about history. You made me laugh several times too! Thank you for the humor; especially when you were walking around the corner and didn’t know what you would find. I think the blue on that building is called Williamsburg blue.

  • @NeopolitianNPLTN
    @NeopolitianNPLTN Месяц назад +1

    I was wondering when you were going to mention that Mexican restaurant. I LOVE LOVE LOVE when they keep the old signage! Just leave it…

  • @ottojones3162
    @ottojones3162 22 дня назад

    Steve, a legend in his own mind. Video would be better with no selfies and a better, professional narrative.

  • @user-ez4ok8gk6m
    @user-ez4ok8gk6m Месяц назад +1

    Your work is always awesome!

  • @Gildacapra
    @Gildacapra Месяц назад +1

    You're in my neighborhood! I'm at Dear Sandy all the time -its just to the right of the open building at 9:20. I think it just cleared out in the last 3-4 months, but I don't think it's in immediate danger of being torn down. Love Hollywood Theatre as well. Not sure if you mention it, but they just did a ton of restoration work on the front of the building

    • @poofygoof
      @poofygoof 11 дней назад

      I jogged by dear sandy today, and it was open with people inside. the north part of the building is still looking for a leasee though.

  • @Zagnutwaller61
    @Zagnutwaller61 16 дней назад

    There was a show I watched about 40 years ago about the theaters of Portnad, I wish I could find it again, because there were so many amazing places around this town. The first one was Tiny and I think showed silent movies. It was either on channel 10 or cable access. They had tons of old photos.

  • @jewelsbreakstherules6132
    @jewelsbreakstherules6132 Месяц назад +2

    You missed the old trolly depo that was right there on powel and 13th I believe across the street from am pm gas station

  • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
    @SisterSherryDoingStuff Месяц назад +1

    55:35 I'm honestly surprised that there aren't a lot of mishaps with the train and people or folks on bikes at that intersection.

  • @metrotcb9560
    @metrotcb9560 День назад

    The area of Powell Blvd that dips under the railroad was dug out in the 1970s so there was no more interruption, traffic back up..
    Powell Blvd used to cross the tracks

  • @donbolin3450
    @donbolin3450 Месяц назад +1

    Aquamarine. Great video, Youngblood.

  • @jenmccullough9686
    @jenmccullough9686 Месяц назад

    This is an awesome post! Subscribed!

  • @Duc_Klackalack
    @Duc_Klackalack Месяц назад +2

    Oh man, at 19:23 I'm thinking; don't turn down the old Hollywood liquor store alleyway! Then you got detoured and went right through it! In 1991 a former classmate murder his girlfriend in that alley. Cut her throat. The sight always triggers the horror of that.. good lord 🙏 Regardless this is such a good Then/Now video. Love your channel!

  • @ashtenarnold5924
    @ashtenarnold5924 Месяц назад +1

    I found this channel for your Kelly Butte video and I’m hooked, awesome content man! Keep it up, I love local history so much and you do an amazing job of keeping your videos entertaining, funny, and super educational. This is awesome!

    • @StevetheAmateurHistorian
      @StevetheAmateurHistorian  Месяц назад

      Thank you so much! I love doing it so there should be a lot more videos to come.

  • @scottwhite2757
    @scottwhite2757 21 день назад +1

    Great Job on this.. Sandy Bld. is weird as the intersections are set up strange i did not know that it was a indian trail but makes sense as alot of roads are based off of trails..

  • @jsteezy80
    @jsteezy80 12 дней назад

    It was a fan that stayed on the billboard until the lockout ended not a broadcaster. I remember he got a vacation to Hawaii or something out of it haha. Z100 was all over that story is why I remember that so well

  • @MichaelChavezsf
    @MichaelChavezsf Месяц назад +1

    Ahh the brown building with graffiti, we’re off to an excellent start 🍿

  • @TheKeeperMadz
    @TheKeeperMadz Месяц назад +1

    Thanks Steve much appreciated.

  • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
    @SisterSherryDoingStuff Месяц назад +1

    39:54 I remember the Mexican restaurant - and the Rose Manor Inn - The Rose Manor in turned into a real haven for criminal activity - and I'm not sorry it's gone.

  • @brantardrey7360
    @brantardrey7360 9 дней назад

    That building was the Pepsi Bottling plant delivery because I went to Benson in 70 and we used to go walk by there and and want to get a case of pop

  • @misspgy
    @misspgy Месяц назад

    This is interesting . I have wishful thinking about moving to somewhere in the Washington area or Oregon area . I miss going on vacations but my son has been posting some cool videos because he is a truck driver with his Go Pro mounted in the truck window so he told me to check out the video on you Tube . So glad I found this video too . Very good information . Before and after .

  • @germanshepard7842
    @germanshepard7842 26 дней назад +1

    You forgot the old Fred Meyer building across from Hollywood theater. What about old Franz bread on sandy next to Benson high school and the old Pepsi and 7up building on sandy. You could of stood on top of the old Fred Meyer building there a parking lot! you also miss the old Winchel's donuts in Hollywood corner of 39th sandy! The Hollywood theater had a fire a few back and burned down.

    • @brantardrey7360
      @brantardrey7360 9 дней назад

      My Chinese tax ladies building next to the Hollywood Theater caused the fire she had kids upstairs running around with clothes everywhere and heaters on of course they're immigrants and foreigners so what do you expect but yeah they almost lost the Hollywood Theater and my dad rented the building right next to it in the 70s to sell pianos

  • @jwaller132
    @jwaller132 Месяц назад +1

    Have you done a video about the area around SE Foster road and SE 67th? It looks like it was a town of it's own many years ago.

  • @pilotmark2861
    @pilotmark2861 21 день назад

    Great video !

  • @victorialinhart4604
    @victorialinhart4604 Месяц назад +1

    The big pink tower of power... Lol

  • @amyluxner2347
    @amyluxner2347 Месяц назад

    Wonderful ! ... thankyou ...nice you did the walking 😂

  • @yogidemis8513
    @yogidemis8513 22 дня назад

    I miss Portland of the 90s.

  • @poofygoof
    @poofygoof 11 дней назад

    putting up new signs is difficult permit-wise, but existing ones can be re-used. demolitions will raze buildings but the signs stay.

  • @jewelsbreakstherules6132
    @jewelsbreakstherules6132 Месяц назад +1

    Also have you ever thought of doing some history in Eugene most people don't no there was a trolly here also

  • @DanPackard
    @DanPackard 15 дней назад

    Yes, a fascinating history in Portland to walk around and compare old and new. The vintage picture you showed at 47:15 of the fruit and veggy stand on Powell blvd. is actually taken across the street looking westbound. You can make out Portland's west hills in the background of the historic photo.
    In the picture of the Kiser studios on Milwaukie avenue at 44:26, you can see the giant Kiser movie studio building in the back left. I think they produced some interesting silent movies in that era (early 1920's) where famous emerging actors like Clark Gable and Boris Karloff got a chance to perform. The connection of those two actors with the Kiser movie studio and Portland needs more research. For a time, could Portland have given Hollywood CA a run for it's money in the movie making business? Questions that need to be answered. Maybe a future video for you. :) Keep up the great historical sleuthing!

  • @poofygoof
    @poofygoof 11 дней назад

    53:56 #PNWR These engines are historically correct for the 60s shots, when this was still southern pacific. A lot of SP engines got sold to smaller railroads and are still in use.
    I think this train continued past Holgate yard (you were near it at 15th & Holgate) and branches off the UP mainline in Milwaukie to go across the river at Lake Oswego. They have trackage rights on UP here and I bet this is a transfer from BNSF's Lake Yard north of Portland.
    Note that the Ford building is up against the railroad, and has now-sealed loading areas for a now-gone siding where parts (and maybe cars?) could be loaded and unload to rail. Buildings with loading docks near Holgate Yard and inner Water district (near OMSI, like city liquidators) are set up for boxcars, even though a lot of the street tracks have been removed.

  • @SisterSherryDoingStuff
    @SisterSherryDoingStuff Месяц назад

    I was hoping you had an image of the Aladdin Theater - I'd love to know more about it. I find it to be my favorite music venue in Portland. Thank you for this. I really enjoy your videos. Sorry for all the comments. 🙂

  • @jsteezy80
    @jsteezy80 12 дней назад

    This is breaking news to me who moved out to Beaverton. They got rid of La Carreta??? Although extremely hot, their burritos were so good and I have so many memories there. Damn that sucks

  • @poofygoof
    @poofygoof 11 дней назад

    I think the building at 15th & holgate might have been a local telephone exchange at one point? I know there was was near that area in the past.

    • @StevetheAmateurHistorian
      @StevetheAmateurHistorian  11 дней назад

      Yeah you got it. I looked it up and an inventory document shows it was originally run by the Pacific States Telephone Co.

  • @flossygalloway5967
    @flossygalloway5967 Месяц назад +1

    What happened in the yr 1111

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад

      You mean, before the genocide??

  • @maks1922
    @maks1922 Месяц назад

    I would like to see a dive into the owner of American Properties. The owner has been in the Portland area for almost a hundred years.

  • @moonbeam7702
    @moonbeam7702 Месяц назад

    I would like to see a video of Beaverton: then and now 🙂 (it’ll probably never happen, of course, but a person can wish)

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад

      It was that long ago Beaverton was pretty much a cow pasture, lol.

  • @user-ln8tq6us9b
    @user-ln8tq6us9b Месяц назад +1

    “wooded off”? boarded up is the usual term

  • @johncoghlan4150
    @johncoghlan4150 Месяц назад +1

    i was told sandy was a cow trail

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify Месяц назад

      Sandy was how you got to Sandy.

    • @panheadbob2926
      @panheadbob2926 20 дней назад +1

      @@raincadeify Sandy Blvd goes out to the Gorge. Powell Blvd is the old Road used to get to Sandy.

    • @raincadeify
      @raincadeify 20 дней назад

      @@panheadbob2926 You're right, it goes to the Sandy River, which makes me wonder if Sandy was named for the river, or vice versa? Thx for the correction.

    • @panheadbob2926
      @panheadbob2926 20 дней назад

      @@raincadeify It does go to the Sandy River. So, you're right as well. I should have remembered that. I'm going to assume that the River was named first.

  • @TheKeeperMadz
    @TheKeeperMadz Месяц назад +1

    Bliss a new video

  • @AdamM19866
    @AdamM19866 Месяц назад

    3:50. Skaters put those in to skate on

  • @moonbeam7702
    @moonbeam7702 Месяц назад

    “There’s always tomorrow”?
    Don’t talk like that - you have a lot of life left to live 🙂

  • @brantardrey7360
    @brantardrey7360 9 дней назад

    Some buildings got plowed down but some got the front remodel the whole building cuz they wanted to be up to date which is crap because they ruined Portland's history

  • @brantardrey7360
    @brantardrey7360 9 дней назад

    It's funny you should mention Tom Black's garage my friend Mr Carlson that was his daughter daughter's husband I think cuz he used to take me over there 40 years ago and the Hollywood Theater my tax lady almost destroyed it in the fire next door she had an office upstairs she was Chinese she had a couple of girls there was clothes and heaters all over the place and I'm sorry that it all burned down because the restaurant below I loved going to so when you get foreigners to come to America that's what you get we almost lost the Hollywood Theater I could go on

  • @DeftIyRL
    @DeftIyRL 27 дней назад

    If you are ever actually concerned or care to know about whether or not a specific building is going to be taken down, you can use the Oregon Historic Sites Database. If the building is eligible/contributing then it is protected. You should probably include stuff like this in your video instead of just saying "yeah, these jerk offs just love taking a building down like this, its probably going to get taken down".
    Its kind of a shitty vibe, especially when the data is readily available for all. Otherwise great video with awesome comparisons to historic photos. The negative blanket you cast over every clip just sours the taste for me personally.

    • @StevetheAmateurHistorian
      @StevetheAmateurHistorian  27 дней назад

      I actually use that resource regularly and several places on there that have been protected have all been torn down in recent years. Unfortunately there are ways around their protection, people find ways to get the designation changed, especially if a developer is eager to get their hands on the land.

    • @DeftIyRL
      @DeftIyRL 27 дней назад

      @@StevetheAmateurHistorian that really sucks to hear. Do you have examples of those places? The historical buildings and architecture are easily some of my favorite parts of this city and are (IMO) a key part of what makes up the essence that we all fall in love with when we walk around the various neighborhoods

    • @StevetheAmateurHistorian
      @StevetheAmateurHistorian  27 дней назад

      One of my first favorite buildings was the old Order of the Workmen Temple that pretty much right when I first discovered it there was always documentation on the wall about them changing its designation. Now there’s a hotel there at 2nd and Taylor. Diagonal from that they demoed the Lotus Cardroom and Cafe super quick cause they were going to build an office connected to the hotel but something must have gone awry cause that demo was 2018 and there’s still just a hole there where the Lotus used to be. That’s someone’s pretty rough when a place gets torn down before the replacement project is even a guarantee. I haven’t been on there in a while but I know they talk a lot about historical designations and things like that on the Stop Demolishing Portland FB page.

  • @heatherlygillpatrick9414
    @heatherlygillpatrick9414 22 дня назад

    you need to film a monkey tail tree?

    • @gregoryhagen8801
      @gregoryhagen8801 20 дней назад

      Those kind of tree's date back to the Jurassic period.

  • @candymcmurdo01
    @candymcmurdo01 26 дней назад

    It's pronounced Kie-zer.

  • @brelyre3221
    @brelyre3221 Месяц назад

    How do you not walk by someone they got to talk to you guess I look like information booth do more natives in Portland and go SE there's guy got give his opinion walks his dog thinks he's big deal 😅

  • @RivhardDavenport
    @RivhardDavenport Месяц назад

    I LIVE NEAR PORTLAND AND GO TO THESE AREAS ALL THE TIME. I'VE LIVED NEAR PORTLAND 55 YEARS AND ITS INTERESTING HOW THINGS CHANGED PICTURES REALLY ARE TIME MACHINES!!!!

  • @Audience_Productions
    @Audience_Productions Месяц назад

    doin the lords work!